From /tmp/sf.17355 Fri Jun 4 00:03:03 1993 Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Path: lysator.liu.se!isy!liuida!sunic!uunet!spool.mu.edu!cserver!edsi!lon From: lon@edsi.plexus.COM (Lon Ponschock) Subject: Review: THE WILD PALMS READER Organization: Enterprise Data Systems Incorporated, Appleton WI Date: Tue, 18 May 1993 17:16:18 GMT Message-ID: <1993May18.171618.9444@edsi.plexus.COM> Summary: a review of the book tie-in to the Television Mini-series Keywords: Wild Palms, Oliver Stone Lines: 83 "... Here compressed into a single slim cone of glass was the spiritual and mental essence of the Pyramids, and the Acropolis, of all the churches, mosques and synagogues of Jerusalem, of Notre Dame and Chartres, and of those later temples of the spirit of human transcendence, the studios of Paramount and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Everywhere that mankind had concentrated its power if dreaming." from _The Wild Palms Reader_ p. 13 THE WILD PALMS READER a book review by Lon Ponschock copyright 1993 by Lon Ponschock Volume Edited by Roger Trilling and Stuart Swezey St. Martin's Press 130 pages $ 14.95 US, 19.99 Can _The Wild Palms Reader has_ 31 authors who contribute to this psychohistory of the Oliver Stone miniseries for television. The authors of The Reader are a who's who of the new cyberspace technology. They include William Gibson who wrote _Neuromancer_ the benchmark cyberpunk novel, Norman Spinrad ( _Bug Jack Barron_,) Thomas M. Disch (_Camp Concentration_,) Pat Cadigan and many others including Japanese manga comics illustrator Suehiro Maruo. The Reader is similar in graphic appearance to the new magazine called _Wired_, whose letters to the editor column and editorials feature Internet-style addresses as signatures. I suppose the style of The Reader is only natural since the editor of The Reader is also an editor of _Details_, a fashion magazine. What the reader does is give a psychohistory of all of the major characters of WILD PALMS. The history begins in 1945 at the concentration camp of Manazar in California. The book is a set of 'documents' in the form of letters, speeches, press releases, transcribed telephone conversations, proposals for grants and scientific papers on the technology and pharmacopoeia of the world of Wild Palms. It shows a complex set of interactions involving the new technology, mind enhancing (smart) drugs, and politics which become the world that we merely glimpse in the television miniseries. It is our world, of course. We are told that The Reader "...is not a book about the world of WILD PALMS, it's a book from that world. It doesn't know it's fiction." Highly recommended. ----------------------------- lon -- lon@edsi.plexus.com